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Proceeds will be donated to RAVEN ​& Climate Justice Toronto.
A warning, a movement, a collection borne of protest.
In Watch Your Head, poems, stories, essays, and artwork sound the alarm on the present and future consequences of the climate emergency. Ice caps are melting, wildfires are raging, and species extinction is accelerating. Dire predictions about the climate emergency from scientists, Indigenous land and water defenders, and striking school children have mostly been ignored by the very institutions – government, education, industry, and media – with the power to do something about it.

Writers and artists confront colonization, racism, and the social inequalities that are endemic to the climate crisis. Here the imagination amplifies and humanizes the science. These works are impassioned, desperate, hopeful, healing, transformative, and radical.
​

This is a call to climate-justice action.

...Watch Your Head does not disappoint. It serves as a warning to heed, a reminder to be thought of often, and a well-thought-out piece of art. Throughout the anthology, readers encounter pieces that provoke and insist, demanding attention, consideration, action, and creativity. Essays and stories and images alike bring about questions and statements on Indigenous rights, white privilege, exploitation of land and people, colonial power structures, place, home, language, and imagination.
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This anthology is not to be missed. The pandemic may have defined our year, but the climate crisis defines our time in geological history. See how this roster of talented writers and artists advance the conversation, put the crisis in context and call for climate justice.
                                                     
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The Quarantine Review
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Watch Your Head is on hiatus until 2023. Check back for submission details in the new year.

PHOTOGRAPHY: ALANA BARTOL

5/12/2020

 
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Alana Bartol, Dowser, 2016.
Performance: dowsing at orphan well site 02-26-031-25W4 (Three Hills, AB). Archival inkjet print, 60.96 x 40.64 cm, ed. of 3.
Photo: Karin McGinn. Courtesy of the artist.
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Alana Bartol. Orphan Well Adoption Agency, 2017-ongoing.
Postcards, signs, online advertising, various dimensions. Courtesy of the artist.
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Alana Bartol. Orphan Well Portrait 05-17-21-33 W4 (Three Hills, AB), 2017.
Archival inkjet print, 63.5 x 43.18 cm. Courtesy of the artist.
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Alana Bartol. Orphan Well Adoption Agency Office, 2018.
Orphan Well Adoption Agency, installation view at Latitude 53.
Photo by Adam Waldron-Blain. Courtesy of Latitude 53.
Over 500+ neckties made from black garbage bags (polyethylene) form the roof of the office.
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Alana Bartol, Orphan Well Adoption, 2018.
Orphan Well Adoption Agency representative Haylee Fortin completing paperwork after an adoption interview.
Orphan Well Adoption Agency, Latitude 53.
Photo by Bryce Krynski. Courtesy of the artist.
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Alana Bartol. Research in OWAA Office, 2018.
Orphan Well Adoption Agency, Latitude 53.
Photo by Adam Waldron-Blain. Courtesy of Latitude 53.
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Alana Bartol. Letters from Adopted Wells to Caretakers, 2017-2019.
Ink on paper, 21.59 x 27.94 cm.
Courtesy of the Orphan Well Adoption Agency.
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Alana Bartol. Letters from Adopted Wells to Caretakers, 2017-2019.
Ink on paper, 21.59 x 27.94 cm.
Courtesy of the Orphan Well Adoption Agency.
Picture
Alana Bartol. Letters from Adopted Wells to Caretakers, 2017-2019.
Ink on paper, 21.59 x 27.94 cm.
Courtesy of the Orphan Well Adoption Agency.
Picture
Alana Bartol. Letters from Adopted Wells to Caretakers, 2017-2019.
Ink on paper, 21.59 x 27.94 cm.
Courtesy of the Orphan Well Adoption Agency.
Picture
Alana Bartol. Letters from Adopted Wells to Caretakers, 2017-2019.
Ink on paper, 21.59 x 27.94 cm.
Courtesy of the Orphan Well Adoption Agency.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION

Alana Bartol, Orphan Well Adoption Agency, 2017-ongoing
 
Founded in 2017, Orphan Well Adoption Agency (OWAA) explores new methods of reading, assessing, and understanding the health of sites contaminated by the oil and gas industry. As part of its work, OWAA is dedicated to finding symbolic caretakers for orphan oil and gas wells across Alberta. As of 2020, over 60 wells have been symbolically adopted.
 
From 2017-2019, Orphan Well Adoption Agency held temporary offices in Alberta at TRUCK Contemporary Art, Latitude 53, and Art Gallery of Grande Prairie. Members of the public were invited to meet with OWAA representatives and apply to symbolically adopt a well. If approved, caretakers received a certificate of adoption with the name and location of an orphan well in Alberta along with a postcard of a well. Caretakers also have the option receive mailed correspondence from their well.
 
OWAA re-imagines dowsing (aka water-witching) as a form of technology for environmental remediation, one that might shift our relationship to natural resources, while examining remediation, care, and the reliability of information. OWAA dowsers uncover information and messages from well sites which transcribed and mailed to caretakers. Although some wells may be dormant and uncommunicative, the OWAA makes every attempt to reach them.
 
Part of the OWAA’s mission is to share information and educate the public about the plight of orphan wells and related issues. The number of orphan wells has steadily increased since the OWAA began its work in 2017. As defined by the Orphan Well Association (OWA), a non‐profit organization that operates under the delegated legal authority of the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER), an orphan is “an oil or gas well site which has been investigated and confirmed as not having any legally responsible and/or financially able party to deal with its abandonment and reclamation responsibilities”. (Orphan Well Association) These sites threaten to contaminate land, water, and life, with remediation efforts lasting up to a decade. Unlike the OWA, OWAA extends the definition of orphan wells to include the 90,000 inactive (or suspended) and 77,000 abandoned[1] wells in Alberta that are not yet fully reclaimed. (Government of Alberta) Though these well sites are still under the responsibility of their company caretaker, they are in the OWAA orphanage so that they might find the recognition and care they deserve. With no time limits on how long a well can sit dormant, many sit in various states of disrepair and remediation, with leaks, spills and excess gas.
 
Learn more at: www.orphanwelladoptionagency.com.
 
Thank you Canada Council for the Arts and Alberta Foundation for the Arts for their generous support of this work. The work of the OWAA has been made possible through connections with Surface Rights Groups in Alberta.
 
 
Works Cited
Government of Alberta, “Upstream oil and gas liability and orphan well inventory.” Alberta, Government of Alberta, 2020, https://www.alberta.ca/upstream-oil-and-gas-liability-and-orphan-well-inventory.aspx. Accessed 26 Feb 2020.
 
Orphan Well Association, “FAQ.” Orphan Well Association, 2020, http://www.orphanwell.ca/faq. Accessed 28 Feb 2020.


[1] Abandoned is an industry term for a well that has been permanently dismantled, meaning that the surface infrastructure was removed, and the well is plugged with cement and capped. Not all abandoned wells are orphan wells, most of the abandoned wells in the province are still the responsibility of the company owner. After abandonment, the next step is to reclaim the site. 
 
Alana Bartol comes from a long line of water witches. Her site-responsive works explore divination as a way of understanding across places, species, and bodies. Through collaborative and individual works, she creates relationships between the personal sphere and the landscape, particular to this time of ecological crisis. A multidisciplinary artist with a B.F.A. from the University of Windsor and an M.F.A. from Detroit’s Wayne State University, she has been a visitor to Treaty 7 territory living and working in Mohkinstsis (Calgary), Alberta for 5 years. Bartol’s work has been exhibited and presented nationally and internationally in galleries and festivals. In 2019, she was longlisted for the Sobey Art Award. She currently teaches at Alberta University of the Arts.
 
http://alanabartol.com
https://www.instagram.com/alanabartol


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    Watch Your Head is an online journal of creative works devoted to the climate crisis and climate justice. 

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​​List of Contributors.
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